
LED therapy deep dive: red, blue, near-infrared and what penetrates
LED wavelengths penetrate skin to different depths and do completely different things; here's the wavelength-by-wavelength guide for at-home use today.
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A skincare routine for acne-prone skin that doesn't shred your barrier.
Quick answer
A working routine for acne-prone skin is shorter than most people expect: gentle non-stripping cleanser, one acid (salicylic, mandelic, or azelaic) at night, oil-free moisturizer, mineral SPF in the morning. Add a retinoid like adapalene after 4 weeks once skin tolerates it. Most clear-skin transformations take 8 to 12 weeks, not 8 to 12 days.
The classic mistake with acne-prone skin is treating it like infected skin. It isn't infected. It's inflamed, slightly over-productive in oil, and usually mid-irritation from a foaming cleanser someone recommended on TikTok. The fix is rarely another active. It's almost always taking something away.
A morning routine that genuinely works on acne-prone skin has four steps: a non-foaming or low-sulfate cleanser, a lightweight niacinamide or azelaic serum, an oil-free moisturizer with ceramides, and mineral SPF 30 or higher. That's it. At night, you swap the serum for one acid or one retinoid, never both on the same evening. Niacinamide at 4 to 5 percent calms redness and regulates sebum without provoking purging, which is why I keep coming back to it as a baseline rather than a hero.
The hardest pivot for most people is the cleanser. If your face feels squeaky after washing, the cleanser is too harsh, full stop. A stripped acid mantle is the single fastest route to more breakouts, not fewer. That squeaky feeling is the sound of your barrier crying.
People stack salicylic, benzoyl peroxide, retinol, and an AHA toner and then wonder why their skin is bleeding by week three. Pick one active and commit for at least eight weeks before judging it. The choice depends on what kind of acne you actually have, which is where most home routines collapse.
Mainstream beauty media treats acne like a problem you outspend. The slow-skincare answer is the opposite. Most acne-prone routines I see have four to seven leave-on products doing overlapping or contradictory jobs. Strip back to four. Hold there for two cycles. Reintroduce one thing at a time, only if you actually need it. If you keep getting flare-ups that don't match your usual pattern, it might not be acne at all. Fungal acne looks identical to a layperson and gets worse with every salicylic step you add.
If you've run a clean, consistent routine for 12 weeks and you're still getting deep, painful, cystic lesions, a dermatologist visit is overdue. Cystic and nodular acne scar permanently while you experiment, and prescription options (topical retinoids stronger than adapalene, spironolactone, isotretinoin) move things in weeks rather than seasons. Cystic acne in particular is not a skincare problem. The same goes for sudden adult-onset acne after 30, which can flag a hormonal shift worth investigating.
And one more thing I keep saying: don't pick. Every pick adds three weeks to a mark's life and increases the odds it leaves a scar instead of a stain. PIE versus PIH is worth understanding before you panic about leftover marks, since the red ones (PIE) and the brown ones (PIH) need different routines entirely.
Dairy and high-glycemic foods show modest associations with acne in current research, especially skim milk. The evidence on chocolate is weaker than the internet suggests, and the evidence on greasy food touching your face is essentially zero. A proper look at the food evidence avoids both the 'diet doesn't matter' dismissal and the elimination-diet overcorrection. For most people, cutting back on skim milk and ultra-processed sugar for 8 weeks is a reasonable n=1 experiment; cutting out chocolate, gluten, and dairy entirely usually isn't.

LED wavelengths penetrate skin to different depths and do completely different things; here's the wavelength-by-wavelength guide for at-home use today.

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